President Jaruzelski’s relations with the USSR as an element of Poland’s Eastern policy in the period of 1989–1990
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Keywords

President, Wojciech jaruzelski, Eastern policy, Poland – history

How to Cite

Nałęcz, D. (2018). President Jaruzelski’s relations with the USSR as an element of Poland’s Eastern policy in the period of 1989–1990. Economic and Political Thought, 60(1). Retrieved from https://mysl.lazarski.pl/mysl/article/view/1634

Abstract

Thanks to the archival sources that have not been used so far, the article
provides an opportunity to look at the mechanism of freeing Poland and, in
a broader perspective, other countries that have been under the Soviet influence
since Yalta, from the hegemony of the USSR. Against this background,
it presents the opinions and intentions of the communists who lost power as
a result of the election of 4 June 1989. They pinned their hopes on Wojciech
Jaruzelski, the President whom the amended Constitution gave great powers.
However, life showed that he could have exercised them only for the price of
the country division, a conflict that would have led to chaos instead of reforms,
a breakdown instead of strengthening Poland’s position on the international
arena. It would have strongly established Jarulelski’s negative image, too.
The President faced a dilemma: support changes, including those that were
geopolitical in nature, or oppose them. Having recognised the interest of the
state and the will of the citizens expressed in the election, he chose the first
option. However, it must be said that his weakening political position played
an important role. The presidential ballot won by one vote, systematic elimination
of the PUWP representatives from posts in the coalition government,
the collapse of PUWP, public opinion dislike – all these things deprived him
of tools to act. In the relations with the USSR, he adopted a role of a buffer.
Until the end of his term of office, however, he believed in the success of the
Soviet perestroika and Gorbachev as a reformer of the system, which would
continue existing after the transformation. That is why he wanted to support
Gorbachev and use him as a guarantor of democracy at home as well as in
international relations. He was afraid of the USSR’s turn to nationalism and
rowdy imperialism. He could not realise Poland’s turn from the East to the
West, accession to NATO and the European Communities. However, he did
not undertake any steps that might have destroyed those plans.

pdf (Język Polski)